[quote name='PsychoCoder' date='6 Oct, 2007 - 03:14 PM' post='264127']
Welcome to this tutorial on resizing a form based on screen size in Visual
Hi this seems not working for me if the form contains the image list control please help me in this

VB6 must be a lot different than VB 2008 Express...
Although your code wouldn't work for me it did send
me in the right direction. Thanks Here is how I reworked
it for VB express. Hope this helps some one.

Hi Sam,
I have my own resizing codes and I think it could help you on your problem; actually it's a generic approach so you can apply it on the tutorial here or on any solution:

Here is the code:

Private Sub Form_Resize()
Dim objControl As Control

If Me.WindowState = vbMinimized Then
' we have to check this. if not, your program will crash when minimized
Exit Sub
End If

' iterate through all the controls on the form to determine
' which to resize and which not to

' OPTION 1: determine via the type of control
For Each objControl In Me.Controls
If TypeOf objControl Is Menu Then
' ignore menu controls
Else
' do the resize here of other controls
End If
Next

' OPTION 2: determine via the "tag" property
' you can set the TAG during design via the properties window
' or programatically by setting it (ex. Text1.Tag="resize_me")
' the TAG value can be anything you like of course
For Each objControl In Me.Controls
If LCase(objControl.Tag) = LCase("resize_me") Then
' resize this
Else
' dont resize
End If
Next
End Sub

End of code:

Hope this helps you and the others.

cyber_sam, on 26 Mar, 2009 - 09:41 PM, said:

I ve used this tutorial n this is workin fine
but when i added image control it was giving error invalid object , i ve solved
this problem by using

if not typeof obj is object

n it is workin fine

but when i added the menu control it is giving error, pls tel me how to solve this problem. is there any alternative way?

Welcome to this tutorial on resizing a form based on screen size in Visual Basic 6. In this tutorial I will discuss a couple issues:

Resize a form based on screen size

Resize the controls on the form based on the form size

Resize the font size of all controls based on the above 2 items

I have received this question for many years, and in my time in </dream.in.code> I have also been asked this question several times, so I thought it would be a good idea to write a tutorial based on this question. THought there are many commercial products out there that will accomplish this, how many students and everyday Joe's actually have the money to be buying these solutions? Not many I can assure you, so after getting this question numerous time, I decided it was time to write my own solution to this problem, and give it back to the programming community.

The code I'm about to show you I have in a Code Module, names FormControl that I include in all VB6 projects I create. This comes in real handy because as developers we don't know what screen resolution a client, or anyone else using our software, will be using. The first thing I have in my module is some Global variables that will be used through out the module, so I, of course, make them Global and accessible to the entire module. Here are the Globals you need to add to your Code Module:

As you will see, the Globals are Private, I don't want them to be accessed from outside this Code Module. The first Global is an Array or type Control. This is a private Type I have created to hold all the properties of the controls on the form. Creating your own user defined type saves a lot of headaches down the road, and allows for resizing all controls in a single loop, referencing your type:

Private Type Control
Index As Integer
Name As String
Left As Integer
Top As Integer
width As Integer
height As Integer
End Type

As you can see, this Type holds all the information needed about a control: Index, Name, Left, Top, Width and Height, these items will come in use later, when we write the procedure to resize all the controls at once. Now lets talk about resizing a form based on the current screen resolution we will be referencing the Screen Object available to us in Visual Basic 6.

The 2 properties we're concerned with are Width and Height. These properties of the Screen Object give us access to the screen size available to us. So, to set the Forms size in relationship to the Screen size, we will be accessing the properties of the Form Object, mainly the width and height properties. In my Module I set the forms size to the screen's size divided by 2, you may want to test and find your own resolution. Here's the simple procedure for resizing your form in relationship to the available screen resolution:

Simple isn't it, we change the forms size based on the screen size, then we reference a procedure called ResizeControls, we do this because resizing the form alone isn't what we're after. Well doing only this will cause some pretty ugly user interfaces, simply because you may be resizing your form, but the controls are staying the same size, which isn't a good thing.

So, you can either write a really long and ugly procedure to resize each control individually,not very maintainable, especially if you rename or add controls, or you can write a nice neat little procedure, based on a user defined type, which we have in our Code Module, and loop through them like this:

Public Sub ResizeControls(frm As Form)
Dim i As Integer
' Get ratio of initial form size to current form size
x_size = frm.height / iHeight
y_size = frm.width / iWidth
'Loop though all the objects on the form
'Based on the upper bound of the # of controls
For i = 0 To UBound(List)
'Grad each control individually
For Each curr_obj In frm
'Check to make sure its the right control
If curr_obj.TabIndex = List(i).Index Then
'Then resize the control
With curr_obj
.Left = List(i).Left * y_size
.width = List(i).width * y_size
.height = List(i).height * x_size
.Top = List(i).Top * x_size
End With
End If
'Get the next control
Next curr_obj
Next i
End Sub

Here we use the UBound Function To get the highest index on the form, which gives us the last control's index. We then loop through all the controls, stopping at the highest index, and change the size of the control. Before this procedure can actually work, we need to know the current location of each control, well I have a solution for that as well.

In this Module is a method called GetLocation. What this method does is it logs the current position of each control, looping through all the controls located in our List() Array, which is populated with the controls on the form. On each iteration of the loop, we use the ReDim Statement and the Preserve keyword to increment the size of the array by 1 and preserve the objects already in the array. The code for that method is as follows:

Public Sub GetLocation(frm As Form)
Dim i As Integer
' Load the current positions of each object into a user defined type array.
' This information will be used to rescale them in the Resize function.
'Loop through each control
For Each curr_obj In frm
'Resize the Array by 1, and preserve
'the original objects in the array
ReDim Preserve List(i)
With List(i)
.Name = curr_obj
.Index = curr_obj.TabIndex
.Left = curr_obj.Left
.Top = curr_obj.Top
.width = curr_obj.width
.height = curr_obj.height
End With
i = i + 1
Next curr_obj
' This is what the object sizes will be compared to on rescaling.
iHeight = frm.height
iWidth = frm.width
End Sub

Our Code Module is almost complete, there is but one thing we need to think about resizing, and that is the font size used in the application. Resizing, say a Label, and not resizing the font being used on the label will make for an ugly User Interface as well. So what we do is, we get the value of x_size, which is one of our Globals, and set in the ResizeControls method, we multiply that by 8 and that gives the font size I'm looking for, you needs may vary. Here is the code for resizing the font size:

Public Function SetFontSize() As Integer
'Make sure x_size is greater than 0
If Int(x_size) > 0 Then
'Set the font size
SetFontSize = Int(x_size * 8)
End If
End Function

That's all the code you need for your form and control resizing based on the users screen resolution. It's all a matter of getting the mathematics right, then resetting the size of everything on the form to fit nicely in the current screen.

This Code Module also offers another feature. If someone were the resize your form while havin the application running, if you put a call to ResizeControls in the Form_Resize Event, this will take care of resizing everthing:

I am providing the Code Module this code is in, this Module and code is under the GNU General Public License, so you can use, modify or distribute as you see fit, but the license header must stay intact. I hope you have found this tutorial informative and useful. For all your Visual Basic 6 Reference Needs go to the Visual Basic 6.0 Resource Center. Thank you for reading.